As now formally proposed, the 88 Bluxome Street project would yield 833,000 square feet of office space rising up to 225 feet in height; 24,000 square feet of ground floor retail/restaurant space; 9,500 square feet of ground floor production distribution and repair (PDR); and a basement garage for 171 cars.

And below the basement garage, a new tennis club, with twelve (12) new tennis courts featuring 35-foot ceilings and all-new club facilities, will be built in order to avoid a threatened ballot measure which could have blocked the proposed redevelopment in its entirety.

In addition to the private tennis club, the proposed plans include a 30,050-square-foot community/recreational center with an underground pool as well, atop of which an affordable housing project is envisioned to be built at a later date, the funding and construction of which is not part of the official 88 Bluxome Street proposal other than a dedication of the site.

This is the problem – another 833K feet of office space. This should be all housing. The 100 units of affordable housing are not part of the project – the developer is simply deeding the space for the affordable project. So up to 4000 jobs could fill the building and no new housing is being required to be concurrently developed.

Beyond the above, the pesky Prop M has pretty much used up the surplus pool and will revert to 850K feet/year going forward. Follow the money as always – the effort to get an exemption from M in the Central SOMA area is being done for one reason. To front load office developments such as this at the expense of housing. This project would have to wait in line for perhaps a good number of years before it gets an allocation but the contemplated exemption to M would allow around 6 million feet of office space to be immediately approved in the Central SOMA with the housing component left to maybe be built in the out years.

ITA and, should the jobs/housing imbalance not be ameliorated by Planning, expect an initiative from housing activists and others to mandate a more realistic jobs/housing balance. If Planning lowers the ratio to 3:1 my guess is most activists would be mollified.

For commercial developers the target is Prop M. A 2018 RE preview by developers and commercial RE types noted that SF is built out (given current planned projects) and the Central SOMA plan has to be approved and M changed in order to continue major office development in SF.

That was sort of the point of the observations. The FiDi is pretty much built out and the TTC hi-rise sites are pretty much taken with development plans in place. There is a shrinking number of parcels available on which large office hi-rise buildings can be built. The Central SOMA plan with parcels such as this up zoned to 250 feet or whatever is needed, per commercial development interests, to allow for continued office construction in SF.

Why would we ever build housing as that is some far away suburbs responsibility?

No Bay Area city in it’s right mind would or should allow housing to be built when instead you can have the benefit of tech or bio-tech office space and all the tax roll benefits that entails verses the costs of having people actually live in your city.

What a ridiculous project. Another sterile, soulless office complex bringing thousands of more people competing for a dwindling supply of middle-class housing. Without any matching housing. This site should be ALL housing. We need a progressive majority on the board of supes to put a stop to development driven by greed and nothing else.

There is a progressive majority on the Board of Supervisors. And, there were plenty of times there was clearly a progressive majority on the Board of Supervisors in the past (e.g. remember the Chris Daly Board?) when they were free to pass whatever legislation they wished regarding housing, office development, etc.

Expensive housing is nothing new in SF, nor is the shortage of affordable housing, nor is congestion, nor is homelessness, etc., etc. And, there could be all the housing necessary for current and future demand if the approval and permitting process was not so onerous in SF, and if there were some modest upzoning–just allow a couple of extra stories in the Sunset and Richmond and BAM, you would have 100,000 or more potential new units. But, nothing sensible like that will ever happen because most of the people wringing their hands and crying “housing,” do NOT want more housing–they want no development, period. Like those rich “neighbors” (who don’t act very neighborly) in North Beach who whined and cried for affordable housing, and now are actively trying to block a proposed affordable housing project.

Nothing has come out of left field. SF has the most regulated, over-processed, public input heavy planning, zoning, approval, permitting, and appeals process in the nation. At the end of the day, SF is a large American city that needs to continue to grow and develop, if people wish to live in a dead city tourist museum, they should move to Venice–very lovely, but no one lives there.

Yes, of course. No membership fees (they’re at about $100/month now I think?), are going to compete with 800-plus cars paying $25-30 bucks a day. If this developer keeps with their historic pattern they will get this entitled, and then sell the project. After that, all bets are off.

Headline from the local CBS affiliate today – San Francisco Bay Area Experiencing Mass Exodus of Residents. It is precisely because of projects such as this – huge amount of new office space and virtually no new housing, that more and more people are fleeing the Bay Area. Not only are there now more people leaving the Bay Area than coming to the Bay Area, the Bay Area is now at the top of the list of regions experiencing out-migration. One SV observer noted

“You can’t even contemplate getting into the housing market here,” Hancock said. “And I don’t mean just service workers, I mean highly skilled professionals. The tech elite are having a hard time affording reasonable housing in Silicon Valley. So this is difficult, this makes it very difficult for employers trying to recruit.”

This is why the Central SOMA plan is so potentially disastrous and, in the long run, will likely hurt the region. Where exactly are the 4000 or so workers in this Tennis Club development expected to live?

If you actually click on the report (and ignore the CBS headline), the number of residents in the Bay Area is still rising. Yes, domestic out-migration to other states exceeds in-migration, but foreign net-immigration offsets it and the overall population growth is positive.

It is a major disaster to SF residents and recreation area in the city. Do we need another high rise in the area and add more traffic to SOMA which is already congested. Who are the [people] behind this? Whoever approve this project should be fired from his job. Did anyone ask the resident in SOMA to vote on this? No more high rises in SF. We need our city back and developers should move develop outside SF.

A.F. You do know this is private “recreation” at a high, members-only fee, not public, right? As a concerned “resident in SOMA” you could have gone to the recent community meeting on this — where incidentally the project received positive response from (presumably “residents in SOMA). Lastly, in response to “We need our city back”?! You mean, you need back a brutal, hulking windowless, anti-pedestrian building that offers absolutely nothing to the public realm of our city?!?